Examples of deduction in the following topics:
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- They do this through induction and deduction.
- In order to test a theory's validity, they utilize deduction.
- Deduction is the act of evaluating their theories in light of new data.
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- Some of the essential terms associated with health insurance are premiums, deductibles, co-payments, and explanations of benefits.
- A deductible is the amount that an insured individual must pay out-of-pocket before the health insurer pays its share.
- For example, policyholders might have to pay a $500 deductible per year, before the health insurer covers any health care costs.
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- In compulsory insurance models, healthcare is financed from some combination of employees' salary deductions, employers' contributions, and possibly additional state funds.
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- At this point, the person is capable of hypothetical and deductive reasoning.
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- While there is no single way to develop a hypothesis, a useful hypothesis will use deductive reasoning to make predictions that can be experimentally assessed.
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- This unity of science as descriptive remained, for example, in the time of Thomas Hobbes who argued that deductive reasoning from axioms created a scientific framework; his book, Leviathan, was a scientific description of a political commonwealth.
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- This person no longer requires concrete objects to make rational judgements and is capable of hypothetical and deductive reasoning.
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- They gather data and evaluate their theories in light of the data they collect (a.k.a. deduction).
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- This unity of science as descriptive remained, for example, in the time of Thomas Hobbes, who argued that deductive reasoning from axioms created a scientific framework.
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- Sociologists use observations, hypotheses, deductions, and inductions to propose explanations for social phenomena in the form of theories.
- 3) Prediction (logical deduction from the hypothesis or logical induction from the data)
- Scientists use whatever they can — their own creativity, ideas from other fields, induction, deduction, systematic guessing, etc. — to imagine possible explanations for a phenomenon under study.
- A useful quantitative hypothesis will enable predictions, by deductive reasoning, that can be experimentally assessed.